Boergstrom, Really Old, like 1950s old
From Scottish Gaelic Grammar Wiki
Mutation:
NOUNS
- Lenition of initial consonants: cat- dà chat
- Prefixation of a nasal consonant: cat- an cat; phonemically: /(ə) Nkahd/
- Palatalization of final consonants on root morphemes: an cat – a’ chait, na cait; this is often accompanied by, or even replaced by, vocalic mutation: an ceann- na cinn.
VERBS
- Palatalization of final consonants occurs, but is ‘relatively unimportant’
- Lentition (a & a dh’) is productive in characterizing the relative mode of all tenses
Borgstroem makes the claim that the syntax of the modes of verbs parallels that of the cases of nouns:
- Nominative – independent
- Can be used without a sentence, ie. as an answer to a question
- In the sentence the verb comes first and the nom second
- Genitive – relative
- The genitive noun is always governed by some antecedent
- A noun
- Biadh a’ choin
- The dog’s food
- A verbal noun governs its object in the genitive
- Thà a’ bhò ‘g ithe an fheòir
- The cow is eating the grass
- A compound preposition:
- air son, an aghaidh
- Sometimes a simple preposition
- fad, bharr
- The adjective làn
- Làn fala
- Full of blood
- Also, two nouns in genitive case maybe coordinated without repetition of the antecedent
- A noun
- The relative verb is always governed by some antecedent
- a noun
- Baidh a dh’itheas an cù
- food that the dog will eat
- Certain conjunctions
- 'nuair, mà, mar, agus
- Interrogatives
- Cò thuigeas sin?
- Who can understand that?
- Topicalized(?)/left dislocated(?) words
- ‘s ann am maireach a thilleas e
- ‘it is tomorrow he will return’
- a noun
- The genitive noun is always governed by some antecedent
- Dative – dependent
- A noun in the dative is always governed by a preposition
- Of the 15 prepositions that can be conjugated, all except chun and eadar govern a noun in the dative
- Unlike in the above cases, when dative nouns are coordinated, there must be a preposition before each one.
- A verb in the dependent case is always governed by a proclitic particle
- as in the dative noun case, when dependent verbs are coordinated, the particle must be repeated in each instance
- A noun in the dative is always governed by a preposition
INTERIM SUMMARY
- Nom/indep forms do not presuppose any antecedents
- Gen/rel forms presuppose antecedents which are often nouns or have a certain affinity to nouns; the antecedent need not be repeated in coordinated phrases
- Dat/dep forms presuppose immediately preceding antecedents which are not nouns, adjectives, or verbs.
Where the parallelism breaks down
- NOM nouns can fill-in for other forms in certain contexts
- After verbal nouns
- ‘g ithe feur
- Before another noun in GEN
- Air cas a’ ghille
- After the prepositions gun and eadar
- After verbal nouns
- The independent form of the verb, however, never occurs after a governing antecedent
Discussion of morpheme boundaries (Key Points):
- Stressed syllables are with few exceptions, word initial
- Munster Irish diverges
- Root morphemes are with few exceptions, word initial
- Gaelic may be a “mildly synthetic” language